United We Pray Loading and Newsletter Logo
Loading ...

Word Study: Whiteness

by | Dec 8, 2020

Editor’s note—part of what makes conversations about race such as “whiteness” so difficult is that we seem to talk past each other. This series explores ways important words are used and provides biblical categories for the ideas behind them. Our goal is not to police language but to provide greater clarity.

If you have been paying attention to conversations about race and racism, you have likely encountered the term “whiteness” used in a number of different ways. It can mean the condition of being born white. It can connote white privilege (a term we will examine in the next installment). It is also used as a synonym for white supremacy.

You can see how this gets confusing in a hurry. If an author intends it as a synonym for white supremacy but the only category the reader has is bare ethnicity, the reader is left feeling that he or she is irreparably racist as a condition of birth. That misunderstanding is a conversation-stopper. Clarity is a central aim for United? We Pray and something we are always striving toward (2 Corinthians 1:13).

My goal is not to advocate for or condemn any of these uses of the word. Context matters so much for meaning and intent. Any of these meanings can be helpful or harmful depending on usage. Here are a few ways you may encounter the word “whiteness” used:

“I have trouble being in white spaces.”

“Things in our church will not change until some Christians come to terms with their whiteness.”

“Whiteness gave us the wide racial divides we see in American churches.”

Those are three very different sentences. The first speaks to the experience of being a minority when so many of the people around are ethnically white. Nothing else may be fairly inferred. The speaker has not implied that there is anything wrong with being white, or even that the white people in the space have done anything wrong. He or she is just stating that it can be hard to be one of only a few minorities in a setting like a church.

The second sentence speaks more to the conditions of society. White people have a different experience than minorities. White Christians may wish to be colorblind, but the conditions of history and our tumultuous present will not allow it. Laws privileging white people over minorities were officially on the books until very recently. Many negative effects linger. White Christians cannot pretend that history started with our generation or that we or our minority friends are unaffected by centuries of codified racism. Until we recognize that things have not been or are not now as they should be, we cannot meaningfully relate to our minority brothers and sisters.

The third sentence speaks to the evil intent which created the society I just described. The US Constitution described people under servitude as 3/5ths a person. At the time this may have included some white-skinned indentured servants, but history shows that, for centuries, being black in America was to be legally considered sub-human. Christians were not immune to this type of thinking. Prominent American theologians such as Robert Dabney taught that there is an ontological difference between black people and white people and that it is the right of whites to subjugate blacks. In this way, whiteness is used, perhaps provocatively, as a synonym for white supremacy. Does it mean that all white people are white supremacists? No. Does it mean that the historical stratification which privileges whites requires the idea of white supremacy? Yes. Our history is not so disconnected from hate as we would like.

These are just three ways the term whiteness is used in conversations about race. There are other ways it may be used, but these are a few of which to make you aware. I hope these examples will help my white brothers and sisters be less defensive when they hear the term, as slowness to take offense is a Scriptural obligation (James 1:19). Let’s not automatically assume the worst, but seek to understand and love our brothers and sisters as Jesus would have us (1 Corinthians 13:7).


Prayer Requests:

  1. Pray that God’s people would be quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to take offense.
  2. Pray against misunderstanding. Satan would love to cloud difficult conversations about race with confusion. Pray that would not happen.
  3. Pray that understanding would lead to greater unity for God’s people.

 

Recent POdcasts

Perseverance and the Black Church

Perseverance and the Black Church

As many of you know, Isaac Adams, who founded our ministry is pastor of Iron City Church in Birmingham, Alabama. This week's episode is an excerpt of a sermon he recently preached on the perseverance of the black church. We hope this testimony of God's faithfulness...

read more
Liberty of Conscience with Ryan King

Liberty of Conscience with Ryan King

Liberty of Conscience Author and Pastor Ryan King joins Austin to talk about his new book, Every Man's Conscience, which explores the contributions of 17th Century Baptists to political theology. That might sound academic, but we have a lot to learn about honoring the...

read more
History of Political Idolatry with Timothy Paul Jones

History of Political Idolatry with Timothy Paul Jones

Political idolatry Dr. Timothy Paul Jones is a professor at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. He joins the show today to lend his historical expertise to our conversation about political idolatry. This is the final installment of the series, so if you haven't...

read more

Upcoming Events

Isaac-Adams-United-We-Pray-speaking-at-an-event

Click Here to View Now

Recent Articles

Anthropology and Antisemitism

Anthropology and Antisemitism

Antisemitism is back in the news. Multiple presidents of prominent universities were recently summoned to Congress to testify about a rise in antisemitic incidents on their campuses. Their refusal to answer questions about whether antisemitism violates school policies...

read more
Dear White Woman

Dear White Woman

I don’t run at night or before the sun comes up. I wonder if you don’t either. While my husband can strap on a headlamp and reflectors and hit the neighborhood running, I have to be more cautious—even in the suburbs. Common sense tells women that running in the dark...

read more
Church, Diversity, and the Questions Kids Ask

Church, Diversity, and the Questions Kids Ask

A few years ago, our family attended an anniversary service for a good friend who pastored a church in our city. Like you would expect when visiting a church, we were greeted at the door by smiling faces and eager handshakes. People were excited to show us to our...

read more

We’d love to hear what you think about this article. Submit your feedback by clicking here to contact us.

Author

  • Austin-Suter-United-We-Pray bio photo

    Austin is the executive director and editor for U?WP. He is a husband, father and seminary student at RTS Charlotte. Austin is a member at Iron City Church in Birmingham, AL. @amsuter

    View all posts

Related Articles

Dear White Woman

Dear White Woman

Courtney Reissig shares her experience of choosing to run at specific times of day in order to stay safe. She reflects on her own privilege and how she might leverage that in service of her minority brothers and sisters.

read more

Stay Connected